I recently spoke at a social media marketing conference at my alma mater, The University of Southern California, on the topic of how social media and other marketing professionals can best get
their C-level executives involved in, invested in, and taking leadership roles in video and social media marketing. I identified three areas that I feel are most important: education, integration and
return on investment (ROI).
Many senior-level executives are reluctant to make the jump into video and social media marketing, and with good reason. Launched without proper planning,
expectations, or without full support, social media campaigns can carry risks to the success of their brands, products, services and to their very jobs.
1. EDUCATION
• Familiarization: Point out the strengths and weaknesses of social media, video and viral marketing, including what's possible, what's working, what hasn't worked -- and why.
• Trust: Teach executives to trust their teams and let them run with the responsibility. Allow them to experiment, share in the successes and failures and learn together. Encourage them to
rely on the teams they have assembled and let them do what they do best.
• Staying Current: Encourage them to start subscribing to and reading industry newsletters and informational
publications like MediaPost, ReelSEO, Mashable, ClickZ and AdAge.
• Perspective: Impress upon them that social media is another valuable tool in their marketing toolbox, not a
complete paradigm shift. Marketing is still about influencing behavior and selling more stuff. Social media is yet another way of accomplishing that goal.
2. INTEGRATION
Social media marketing shouldn't exist in a bubble. There should be a larger strategy at play. Including these points will help when presenting social media as an option to senior
leadership.
• Mixing It Up: Mixing social media with existing advertising, PR, and sales initiatives increases the reach of each initiative. To a C-level executive, this may mean the
difference between total buy-in or back-shelving social media for now. Also, the point of video marketing is to create conversation about video assets and spread the brand message in that space. If
you are not working with a viral marketing agency, internal PR teams should be consulted during campaign conception and not alerted as an afterthought.
• Real-Time Interaction: Social
media allows brands and businesses to interact in real time as an extension of other media initiatives. Reactive engagement is key in establishing and maintaining a consistent flow of communication
between your brand and the influencers and consumers who support the brand. Social media is also invaluable in trouble-shooting and problem-solving.
• Manage Expectations: (Paid vs.
Earned): Many C-level executives are still under the impression that social media is free. Clarify that paid placements including TV ads, video banners, blog and publication outreach and other
initiatives should be at play to jump start social media success. The idea is to go from paid marketing to earned marketing as the campaign progresses. Earned is the free part.
•
Purposed vs. Repurposed Video: Encourage executive buy-in for branded entertainment and original online video by planning ahead and producing content that can be repurposed as TV ads, outdoor
advertising, banners and PR assets.
3. RETURN ON INVESTMENT (ROI)
Social Media campaigns are all over the map in both return and measurement of return. That's
enough to make any executive nervous.
• Soft return vs. hard return: Soft measurables like hype, buzz, awareness and brand lift are important, but can often fall flat in front of a
C-level executive staring down the barrel of a sales spreadsheet. Eventually, no matter how much brand awareness we can generate and measure, the bottom line is still about selling stuff. This point
must be addressed before significant buy-in can be expected.
Predictive ROI: Establishing a favorable return on investment prior to approving, developing or launching a campaign is key. Once
you have measurable goals in mind, back track to map out a social media strategy that will achieve these goals. If the cost of the social media initiative is less than the predicted rewards of
achieving the goals, then launch away!